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Frank Mowbray Taubman

1868 - 1946

Sculptor. Of Manx origin, he studied at the Finsbury and Lambeth schools of art, and then in Paris under Puech and Frémiet, and in Brussels under Vanderstappen. The critic Marion Spielmann says that Taubman was influenced as well by the Belgian sculptor Constantin Meunier, and that his “success in the Belgian schools was remarkable”. His address between 1894 and 1897 was given in the Royal Academy catalogues as 123 rue Potagère, Brussels. The work which he showed at the Royal Academy in 1895, Wild Ass and Panther, was modelled, according to Spielmann, at the Jardin des Plantes in Paris, under instructions from Frémiet. Taubman returned to England in 1898, exhibiting in that year an Adam and Eve and a Joan of Arc at the Royal Academy. Amongst his works of the 1890s were an Old Charwoman and a Dustman, both life-size, which were of a different order from the general run of ideal subjects, but which no doubt reflected the influence of Meunier. The realist strain seems not to have persisted, judging from the titles of the works which he continued to show up to 1938 at the RA. These indicate a preference for Greek mythology and history. Taubman executed two virtually identical statues of Sir Sydney Waterlow, for Waterlow Park, London (1900) and for the United Westminster Schools, London (1901). His Memorial to Lord Carlingford is in the Waldegrave Chapel at Chewton Mendip. From 1935, his address is given in the Royal Academy catalogues as “Brook Side”, Kemerton, Tewkesbury. Around 1900 Taubman had a reputation as a graphic artist and caricaturist. He also wrote poetry. A small collection of his work is to be found in the Manx National Heritage Museum, Douglas, Isle of Man.

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